Plagiarism
Despite the fact that it is easier than ever for teachers to catch plagiarists, some few students continue to try to use the words and ideas of others as if they conceived them. Plagiarism is as simple as that. A plagiarist is a "thought-thief" attempting to steal the work of another person's mind and passing it off as his or her own. Believe that your teacher and the Department of English are doing everything they can to identify and punish plagiarists including keeping student work in an archive, searching the Internet, and subscribing to an Internet service which identifies plagiarized material from a huge database.
Plagiarism can be either intentional or unintentional, conscious or unconscious. In any case, whether intended or not, the use of another's ideas and words as if they are your own is considered plagiarism. Your teacher believes that most plagiarism is unintentional, but that simply shows that the student has not learned the lesson taught. It is the responsibility of the student to learn how to avoid the problem.
Two simple techniques can help avoid the appearance and fact of plagiarism:
The class policy follows the University policy, to wit:
A record of all student plagiarism is kept by the Dean of Student Affairs. All teachers finding plagiarism report to this University office.